TAMPA BAY, Fla. - After the 10 News Investigators reported that a number of applicants to serve on Florida Polytechnic's first Board of Trustees have potential conflicts of interest, a new round of potential conflicts are surfacing for other applicants.

Brian Philpot, owner of land investment corporation Land South LLC and engineering firm Econ South LLC, and a close ally of State Sen. JD Alexander, R-Lake Wales. On his application, Philpot listed he hadn't had any direct dealings with any governmental agency in Florida the last four years, yet Econ South received more than $127,000 in contracts from USF Polytechnic in 2011. The company even lists USF Poly as a client on its website.

Robert Kincart, owner of science & engineering firm American Compliance Technologies. Although Kincart indicated on his application that he had dozens of contracts with local agencies "provided upon request," he did not specifically indicate the three large contracts his company received from USF in Polk Co.

Philpot, who admitted the mistake to 10 News, said he notified the governor's office Monday of his company's dealings with Poly.

Kincart, who told 10 News he took the application literally when it asked if he had any contracts with any state agencies (such as FDOT, FDEP, etc., rather than state universities), said he saw no conflict of interest in his dealings with other universities such as USF since Florida Polytechnic would be it's own independent entity. In the name of full disclosure, he provided 10 News with a list of five contracts his company has completed for USF and the Florida Institute of Phosphate Research (which is now part of Fla. Poly).

Other trustees with possible conflicts include:

Thomas Cloud, a partner at law firm Gray Robinson, which was the firm representing the Williams Group. The development group donated the land Florida Poly will be built on and still, controversially, controls it, while also owning significant property all around the future campus.

Ronald Clark, an attorney at Clark, Campbell, and Lancaster, which was the law firm that represented USF-Polytechnic until last month.

Joshua Brown and Charles Lewis, a pair of men who identified themselves as active, registered lobbyists.

UPDATE: Lewis has since told 10 News he has never been registered as a lobbyist and accidentally checked the wrong box on his application

John Fleming, the president of Phoenix Industries, a company owned by State Sen. JD Alexander's family. Fleming also accidentally applied for a position on USF's Board of Trustees, rather than FPU's.

John Hugh Shannon, a Lakeland lawyer whose references included a close ally of Alexander's, lobbyist Wayne Watters.

The state's Board of Governors will nominate finalists for vetting, background checks, and consideration in time for the full board's meeting on, likely to take place on June 21. Once appointed, Florida Poly BoT members will make decisions for the new school until the appointees have a chance to be confirmed by the Senate in early 2013.